000 01919n a2200241 a 4500
001 034455
005 20231009192620.0
008 141118s2003 nyu 000 1 eng
010 _a2003044326
020 _a9780871139030
050 0 0 _aPS3562.E534
_bU55 2003
082 0 0 _aMYS LEO
100 1 _aLeon, Donna
245 1 0 _aUniform justice
_c/ Donna Leon.
250 _a1st American ed.
260 _aNew York
_b: Atlantic Monthly Press
_c, c2003.
300 _a259 p.
_c; 22 cm.
520 _aMystery fans who have not yet discovered Leon's elegant Venetian puzzles starring the canny but scrupulously honest police commissario Guido Brunetti are in for a special treat. An American who has lived in Venice for more than 20 years, Leon offers intimate, behind-the-scenes portraits of an ancient city that few tourists ever see while presenting intricate, intelligent mysteries that address facets of contemporary Italian life: the opera (Death at La Fenice), the Church (The Death of Faith), and now the military. When Brunetti is called to investigate the hanging death of a young cadet at an exclusive military academy, he meets a wall of silence from the authorities, who just want to see the case closed quickly as a "suicide." Already contemptuous of a corrupt system that he sees as no different from the Mafia except "that some wore easily recognized uniforms while the other leaned toward Armani and Brioni," Brunetti turns to the boy's grieving but uncooperative parents for help. Could the father's resignation as one of the few honest politicians from the Italian parliament have something to do with the boy's death? Brunetti doggedly pursues the case even though he realizes that in the end justice is not always dispensed uniformly.
650 0 _aBrunetti, Guido (Fictitious character)
_x--Fiction
650 0 _aPolice
_z--Italy
_z--Venice
_v--Fiction
655 7 _aMystery fiction
942 _cMO
999 _c244619
_d244619